Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/02/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In a previous life as a Port Health Officer I had to adminster the import and examination of wines and spirits under legislation. Sake initially caused me a great headache (no pun intended) until I realised that technically (because of the brewing process) it is, in fact, a beer! Gerry On 15/02/2008, Ted Grant <tedgrant@shaw.ca> wrote: > Richard Man suggested: > > Subject: [Leica] IMG: yum yum, not for Ted? :-) > > Hi Richard, > Now that's my kind of food by the barrel! :-) I eat Japanese as often as I > can at home or traveling. I even had a great dinner in Moscow awhile back > where I didn't expect to find a Japanese restaurant. > > The bad-good thing was? The price was bad "I'm glad I didn't have to pay > the > bill!" A photo buddy paid. :-) > > The good part? The food was wonderfully fresh and I didn't have to pay! :-) > > Not many items I've not taken too. However there are two I stay away from. > Mackerel, always tastes very "fishy!" And Uni, it always feels like a > mouthful of fine sand. > > However, quails egg with Salmon roe is a mind blowing wonderful delicacy!! > Japanese restaurants can be very relaxing when you sit in a tatami room > with > door shut, quietly eating and conversing without a maddening crowd of > diners. The food is accompanied with copious amounts of hot Saki, or in > the > summer I like cold saki served in the small wooden box. > > Nothing like an assignment to learn about the foods of other nations you're > working in. > > My first time to eat raw sea food was in Japan in 1968. The eating it was > determined by the thought. "Well OK eh? 100 million Japanese can't be wrong > go for it!" And I've never turned away from it since, I just realized 40 > years! WOW, time flies when you're eating well. :-) > > Oh yeah and the saki? Wonderful! > > So yes it is yum yum for Ted anytime! > > ted